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Sep 28, 2012
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also steve jobs as you have never seen him before. you'll see what we're talking about right after this. as we head to break look at this morning's early movers on wall street. now, that's what i call a test drive. silverado! the most dependable, longest lasting, full-size pickups on the road. so, what do you think? [ engine revs ] i'll take it. [ male announcer ] it's chevy truck month. now during chevy truck month, get 0% apr financing for 60 months or trade up to get the 2012 chevy silverado all-star edition with a total value of $8,000. hurry in before they're all gone! with scottrader streaming quotes, any way you want. fully customize it for your trading process -- from thought to trade, on every screen. and all in real time. which makes it just like having your own trading floor, right at your fingertips. [ rodger ] at scottrade, seven dollar trades are just the start. try our easy-to-use scottrader streaming quotes. it's another reason more investors are saying... [ all ] i'm with scottrade. take a look at the data feedback. i
also steve jobs as you have never seen him before. you'll see what we're talking about right after this. as we head to break look at this morning's early movers on wall street. now, that's what i call a test drive. silverado! the most dependable, longest lasting, full-size pickups on the road. so, what do you think? [ engine revs ] i'll take it. [ male announcer ] it's chevy truck month. now during chevy truck month, get 0% apr financing for 60 months or trade up to get the 2012 chevy silverado...
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Sep 28, 2012
09/12
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with more on what's going on, steve? >> reporter: yeah, very good to see you guys aguy. in five hours' time that's when we're told we'll get this announcement which is the second part of a two-act drama. yesterday we had the first act which was the budget which pretty much ticked all the boxes from a european commission point of view, ie, spain was playing ball with all of the desires to work toward a fiscal compact and to work towards better regulation and better deficit control of the region. and today it's all about the banks, the big audit is expected to show a shortfall of bank funding of somewhere in the region of 62 billion euros. a lot of question marks about whether it's a 62 billion euros or actually under underestimates significantly how much money they need to raise, it's not about the big guys which are deemed to raise money whenever they want, it's about the second tier and third tier banks and we think the likes of bank inter will be at the crux of this. but questions remain whether they'll have to unload assets into a bad bank at a lower level than they'v
with more on what's going on, steve? >> reporter: yeah, very good to see you guys aguy. in five hours' time that's when we're told we'll get this announcement which is the second part of a two-act drama. yesterday we had the first act which was the budget which pretty much ticked all the boxes from a european commission point of view, ie, spain was playing ball with all of the desires to work toward a fiscal compact and to work towards better regulation and better deficit control of the...
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Oct 3, 2012
10/12
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obviously as you remember, steve jobs famously panned the smaller tablets. but people seem to like them. they're serving a purpose. so apple wants to play in that game and they should. that's a smart move. >> but why should they? they already lead in the tablet department with the ipad. why dabble in something that seems to be a fairly sizable risk? >> my guess is they won't dabble. they'll go into it. and the reason it's important, mobile, all of the devices from the iphone to the tablets, are becoming platforms and folks are building apps on top of them, you standardize your household and your work around a particular operating system. in this case i chos. and this will be another one of those. if apple was missing a key device that a lot of people wanted, especially at a price point a lot of people wanted, that could hurt them over the long haul in term hes of market share. so definitely smart for them to play there. the issue is what does it do to their margins. with the mini, you may see this is a much lower margin product than the iphone. >> are they w
obviously as you remember, steve jobs famously panned the smaller tablets. but people seem to like them. they're serving a purpose. so apple wants to play in that game and they should. that's a smart move. >> but why should they? they already lead in the tablet department with the ipad. why dabble in something that seems to be a fairly sizable risk? >> my guess is they won't dabble. they'll go into it. and the reason it's important, mobile, all of the devices from the iphone to the...
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Oct 2, 2012
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today, she is steve liesman's special guest. steve? >> tyler, thanks very much. she has been called america's top financial diplomat and is a special guest at a fortune magazine most powerful women conference in california. lael brainard joins us now. welcome to "power lunch," lael. >> it's a pleasure to be here. >> let's talk what tyler was talking about, this issue of spain and the question of whether or not it's going to ask for aid and trigger that ecb program. is it your opinion, the opinion of the u.s., that the europeans are following through on their latest set of commitments when it comes to solving their financial crisis? >> well, you're right, they've made a series of very important commitments over the course of the summer and into the fall. they are much better prepared. they have a set of tools that can help governments like spain continue to access the markets at affordable rates while they continue making these very challenging reforms. we have seen a number of developments in spain in recent days. we have seen a budget come out that continues to
today, she is steve liesman's special guest. steve? >> tyler, thanks very much. she has been called america's top financial diplomat and is a special guest at a fortune magazine most powerful women conference in california. lael brainard joins us now. welcome to "power lunch," lael. >> it's a pleasure to be here. >> let's talk what tyler was talking about, this issue of spain and the question of whether or not it's going to ask for aid and trigger that ecb program....
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Sep 27, 2012
09/12
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let's go to steve in florida. >> caller: boo-yah, jim. >> boo-yah, steve. >> caller: i just wanted to say thank you for everything you do for us people. >> i'm doing my best, thank you for that, it's great that you said it. >> caller: i have made enough money, jim, i moved from pennsylvania to florida this month. >> good for you sunshine. i was talking about doing that judgment the other day, saying you know what? when this gig is over, which may not be for another 40 years, i would move to florida. >> caller: it's beautiful, but my big question is here is winn resorts. we all know winn is twaes $125 stock, but with winn slipping here again, even though they were up a little bit today, with the china stimulus, that's going to help the stock come back up, isn't it? >> i agree with you, i got to tell you winn surprises me that it's down that much. vegas hasn't been that hot. i'm bullish on wynn. that hunt mean it can't go down ten, but i think it does go up 25%. >> bill. >> caller: my question is this, gm is already doing well with china, with the proposed stimulus package they're talki
let's go to steve in florida. >> caller: boo-yah, jim. >> boo-yah, steve. >> caller: i just wanted to say thank you for everything you do for us people. >> i'm doing my best, thank you for that, it's great that you said it. >> caller: i have made enough money, jim, i moved from pennsylvania to florida this month. >> good for you sunshine. i was talking about doing that judgment the other day, saying you know what? when this gig is over, which may not be for...
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Sep 25, 2012
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steve liesman has more back at hq. good morning to you, steve. >> i might have an answer to that, but the poll of 800 americans across the country, we have been asking, is this a good time or bad time to invest in stocks? trying to get ordinary americans to weigh in on the market, not just investors. here's what the data shows. you still see pretty downbeat on stocks. the red line saying 48% of america thinks it's a bad time to invest in stocks. just down a little bit. only 30% say it's a good time. a little bump up in those, maybe some people are on the fence, but this chart tells you n general, what we think is that the retail investor has not participated in this rally. that's what i think the data is showing us right now. now we'll take another slice of this and look at what we call the financial elite. who are these people? we have incomes of at least 75,000 out of at least 50,000 in the market. what you see there is pretty much the reverse of the general public. 50% say this is a good time to invest in stocks. 34
steve liesman has more back at hq. good morning to you, steve. >> i might have an answer to that, but the poll of 800 americans across the country, we have been asking, is this a good time or bad time to invest in stocks? trying to get ordinary americans to weigh in on the market, not just investors. here's what the data shows. you still see pretty downbeat on stocks. the red line saying 48% of america thinks it's a bad time to invest in stocks. just down a little bit. only 30% say it's a...
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Sep 25, 2012
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cnbc's steve liesman joins us and steve you've got some explaining to do about the numbers. >> i know we're going to delve into this mystery. so many americans think things are worse off than they were four years ago and so many americans seem to be supporting obama as the one to fix it. let's go into some of the possible reasons here. first of all let's show you the top line results here. this is what we showed in june, we asked a very end of the economic economy but not the same, romney had a six-point lead. our september survey, 800 adults, same people did it, shows a nine-point lead for obama. how can that be? let's look at some of the potential reasons. could it be slightly better economic numbers? no, they don't show up in the data. could it be somewhat better stock market? we do show some bump up in that, not enough to explain the results but three reasons look like they could stand here. change in racial support, the personal appeal of obama versus romney and the tax issue. let's look at the obama support june versus september. slightly different question, not entirely compara
cnbc's steve liesman joins us and steve you've got some explaining to do about the numbers. >> i know we're going to delve into this mystery. so many americans think things are worse off than they were four years ago and so many americans seem to be supporting obama as the one to fix it. let's go into some of the possible reasons here. first of all let's show you the top line results here. this is what we showed in june, we asked a very end of the economic economy but not the same, romney...
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Oct 1, 2012
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earlier some attributed part of the rally to what chicago fed bank president charlie evans told our steve liesman this morning on cnbc. listen. >> in my opinion, we'd continue with the asset purchases until we see payroll employment more like 200,000, 250,000. >> you're saying continue at 85 billion into all of 2013? that would be your recommendation? >> this is my recommendation. >> so is the fed's bond buying spree fueling the markets and should we be worried it won't last? that's what we're talking about right now. eric is with us of gerring wealth management. he says yes. gary clark says be defensive knew, expect a rally after the election. thanks for joining us. harry, why do you expect a rally after the election? we'll get nr clarity then? >> that's one thing. the uncertainty is the death of the market. i think we're going to get a correction first. the market is tired. the tired gain of last month was two days. ecb day and qe forever day. that's not good for the markets. the market needs a correction. think now anywhere from 5% to 8% will do it. a lot of money out there waiting to
earlier some attributed part of the rally to what chicago fed bank president charlie evans told our steve liesman this morning on cnbc. listen. >> in my opinion, we'd continue with the asset purchases until we see payroll employment more like 200,000, 250,000. >> you're saying continue at 85 billion into all of 2013? that would be your recommendation? >> this is my recommendation. >> so is the fed's bond buying spree fueling the markets and should we be worried it won't...
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Oct 2, 2012
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sunday after the half marathon that we're doing with steve. >> fantastic. there you go. thank you very much. >> and rod the director. >> that's right. >> i'm slightly -- i'm a little gummed up in my ear. there we go. who is directing this is this over in south korea, the possibility of another rate cut next week is rising. here's more from seoul. hi rhie. >> hey, there, ross. september consumer price rose 2%, well below the target of 3%. so despite higher prices for oil and things like vegetables after the typhoon last month, inflation a not a major concern here. what is, though, are yesterday's september which poexport figure. exports fell for the third straight month. as of today we saw factory output levels softest since early 2009. all of this build as case for the bank of korea to cut rates by 25 basis points and they in fact said they will switch over priorities from price stability to encouraging growth. after such a clear signal here next week's balancing act shouldn't be too difficult for the policymakers here. back over to you. >> thanks for that. still to come
sunday after the half marathon that we're doing with steve. >> fantastic. there you go. thank you very much. >> and rod the director. >> that's right. >> i'm slightly -- i'm a little gummed up in my ear. there we go. who is directing this is this over in south korea, the possibility of another rate cut next week is rising. here's more from seoul. hi rhie. >> hey, there, ross. september consumer price rose 2%, well below the target of 3%. so despite higher prices...
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zells said is similar to what steve jobs said before passing away. this is a country where it is just too hard to do business in. >> yeah. i was going to say, you're not much of a golfer guy but a tennis guy, right? >> ryder was just a collapse. >> yeah. we let pollster on -- for me it was going to a shrink or something. it was come peopling but my heart was racing, i had butterflies in my stomach and didn't think it could happen. when it did, i felt hollow after it. >> i had a bunch of guys going to the eagles/giants game. you would have thought either of the games would have been talked about. the ryder cup is all i heard about. people felt bad for america. it was a patriotic thing. >> for one eagle moment, i just thought, i don't know, ma lays, i thought, we can't do this right. >> if they come in with cardigan sweaters the next time we see the golfers with the cardigan and have to start talking about turning down the thermostat, it is pool game over. >> all right. jim, thank you. we'll see you in a few minutes. >>> all right. we'll see jim in a f
zells said is similar to what steve jobs said before passing away. this is a country where it is just too hard to do business in. >> yeah. i was going to say, you're not much of a golfer guy but a tennis guy, right? >> ryder was just a collapse. >> yeah. we let pollster on -- for me it was going to a shrink or something. it was come peopling but my heart was racing, i had butterflies in my stomach and didn't think it could happen. when it did, i felt hollow after it. >>...
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Oct 3, 2012
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at the open system that microsoft propagated opting for a closed system to be controlled by one man, steve jobs. one look at the market capitalizations shows the wisdom of jobs' position. more important for this matter is the fact that microsoft's customers ended up in a business that reminds me of the uncoded free sheet paper business, the commodity where there can be no value added. yes, they, the customers, the dells and hewlett-packards, are the true losers of the bill gates movement. hewlett-packard isn't just personal computing but it's printing and consulting. i loathe the printers. as far as consulting goes, take a look how well their competitors are doing. the companies i work for, i pray they see the light and go apple. hewlett-packard is a huge company with quite a hold on the tech budgets of big corporations. but the company will eventually will ripped out of the enterprise. you can't have something that young people hate prevail forever. funny thing, younger people, they get older. and they take the reins from the relics who jammed dell and hewlett-packards down our throats. s
at the open system that microsoft propagated opting for a closed system to be controlled by one man, steve jobs. one look at the market capitalizations shows the wisdom of jobs' position. more important for this matter is the fact that microsoft's customers ended up in a business that reminds me of the uncoded free sheet paper business, the commodity where there can be no value added. yes, they, the customers, the dells and hewlett-packards, are the true losers of the bill gates movement....